It's
the time of year when people are inclined to believe in miracles,
magic, wishes and dreams come true, so of course it's not surprising
that the County Council has given Coco Palms the green light.
Developer
Chad Waters brushed away concerns that he's a “flipper” – that
was in a past life, when he worked with little stuff, like California
spec houses, before graduating, Monopoly-style, to hotels — and
both he and his partner, Tyler Green, re-reiterated their intentions
to do all the right things.
Ah,
yes. Good intentions. That perennially popular paving stone on the
road to hell.
Though
they declined to put those intentions in writing, no doubt we can
trust them. After all, the people who are getting money from them
swear they're the absolute greatest guys in the whole wide world.
As
a friend observed, let's just hope we don't have a hurricane or
tsunami in the next two years while the Iniki ordinance is in effect. Otherwise, we'll be in for a real planning disaster, with all sorts of
non-conforming and inadequately setback structures allowed to
rebuild in place.
Many
folks, including myself, are wondering why the county hasn't made
Prudential Insurance, which owns Coco Palms, tear the wreck down. So I
asked county communications director Beth Tokioka, who said the mayor
had “looked into that issue exhaustively
shortly after he first took office and according to our staff, there
was no way to accomplish that given current laws.” Here are the
reasons given by the Building Division
and Fire Chief:
After
reviewing the condition of the property, the county was unable to
find evidence that the buildings are structurally unsafe. In
the past even when it was apparent that a building was structurally
unsafe (e.g. Po‘ipÅ« Beach Hotel after Hurricane Iniki), the County
Attorney determined that fencing of the project site was sufficient
and we could not require demolition.
So
it looks we're gonna be stuck with that eyesore until hell
freezes over and gives Kauai a white Christmas.
County
Auditor Ernie Pasion has hung out his stocking – in the form of a
legal complaint against the County and Council Chair Jay Furfaro —
hoping for some candy to go with the lumps of coal already delivered
by the County Council.
By
which I mean a letter of reprimand in his file, a one-week
suspension, a 120-day probation period followed by an evaluation, and
an ongoing quarterly assessment by an “audit review committee.”
Now
Pasion wants the county to kick down some cash for his $600-per-hour
legal fees and medical costs (doesn't he have insurance?). Because
it's stressful, ya know, to fight off legitimate efforts to can your
ass and difficult to find the money to pay such expenses yourself,
even when you're earning $114,848 a year.
Pasion's
attorney claims the Council cruelly “held the threat of termination
over Pasion's head, disrupting Pasion's ability to fully perform his
job as Auditor and causing Pasion ongoing and severe emotional
stress.”
If
you're generous, that may explain his lack of performance since
September. But what about the year-plus prior? Because his office
hasn't produced any audits in 18 months.
Ernie's
complaint contends he was persecuted for an audit that showed
irregularities in the mayor's use of a fuel card, resulting in the Council's illegal retaliation against him. His attorney further maintains the
Council has no authority under the Charter to discipline the auditor.
Even, apparently, if he's been a bad boy. Great. Another county employee with no accountability.
But
others say Pasion was nearly fired because he failed to conduct an audit into alleged
improper fuel use by former Prosecutor Shaylene Iseri-Carvalho and
her deputy, Jake Delaplane. And according to a hostile workplace complaint filed by former staff internal auditor Ron Rawls,
Ernie and Shay doctored the fuel audit investigative report given to
the Council to make the mayor, their political enemy, look bad.
Rawls
says he was harassed when he spoke up, and subjected to illegal
retaliation. He was ultimately banished by Pasion to a small, windowless
office with no work assignments for five months. Rawls resigned
effective Jan. 7, 2013, and the auditor's office has essentially been
at a money-sucking standstill ever since.
Gee, somebody
needs to develop a cheat sheet so we can keep all the retaliation
allegations and harassment lawsuits straight.
But thankfully for the plaintiffs, giving is the theme during the holidays, and like Santa, the county
has an endless sack full of goodies, right? And since it's cheaper to
settle than fight, no doubt all those who have penned a wish list
will find some bling under the tree, if not this year, then next — regardless of whether they've been naughty or
nice.
Ho, ho, ho!
Ho, ho, ho!
7 comments:
Coco Palms is rat infested. It's a growing health problem.
Whomever gets the job of tearing it down will be exposed to diseases. Health insurance should come with the job. Wear a gas mask to prevent inhaling mold spores and rat dried rat and cockroach crap
But, seriously, the neighbors will eventually burn it down to the ground.
Zero Seven
There is also an odor coming from the Coco Palms which the neighbors including the eateries in the area had to endure daily.
Can the State DOH and/or the County's Public Works (Safety) visit the area and demand the property owner to do something either tear it down, do a regular pest control, etc.?
Very concern neighbor
Ron Rawls says Ernie Pasion knew about illegal use of county cars and gas but nothing happened? And the mayor got away with it? WTF?
so, isn't Ron Rawls looking for some candy too?
Rawls wants money. Is he telling the truth about Ernie Pasion?
Was the council given the full report or not? If Rawls is saying Pasion cut stuff out of a report before giving it to council to act on - that should be easy to verify or disprove. If he did, then it gets clearer.
It's my understanding the Council initially was given an "executive summary" rather than the full report.
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